Indigenous Peoples are essential to protecting and restoring the world's ecosystems and natural environment, that's why they need to be at the heart of planning and implementation of projects that affect them.
Sheep pox and goat pox are highly contagious. An outbreak can cause significant production losses.
The 'Rice value chain improvement' project, will improve the livelihood of rice farmers and increase the productivity of Ghana鈥檚 rice crops, reducing the country鈥檚 dependency on rice imports.
Isgandar Shiralizada developed a passion for beekeeping at an early age. He fulfilled his childhood dream of keeping bees and producing honey, which eventually led to a successful career in the honey sector. With support from the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (), Isgandar has been able to expand his beekeeping business, become economically independent and serve as an ambassador to inspire the next generation of beekeepers.
Young rural people are bringing agriculture into the digital age. Meet who鈥檝e cracked the code: how to irrigate crops while saving both time and water.
Join the Poster and show us your creativity! Design a poster that symbolizes your favourite dish or recipe, representing the importance of diverse, nutritious, safe and affordable foods. Show us what this means to you, your community or the world through art. The deadline is 8 November 2024.
by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations () reports widespread damage to agricultural infrastructure across Gaza, including damage to over 57 percent of total cropland, the destruction of 33 percent of greenhouses and significant losses in wells and solar panels. Farmers like Yousef Al-Masri and Mohamed El Yaty are essential to Gaza's food supply. However, they and other farmers, herders and fishers in the Gaza Strip are struggling to maintain their agricultural assets, sources of nutrition and income due to the escalation of hostilities and lack of availability and access to critical agricultural inputs.
Farmer Tawfik's olive trees thrive thanks to a 100% natural compost created from Aleppo pine cones, supported by IFAD and the Tunisian government.
Efforts to rediscover and cultivate over 350 key crops, supported by global initiatives like the , are crucial for enhancing food security, resilience, and nutrition in the face of climate change.
The emergency wheat production initiative in Sudan, implemented by the , has significantly boosted wheat production and provided crucial support to farmers, especially those displaced by the ongoing conflict.
Hunger is not driven by a lack of food or an inability to grow it. Instead, it is primarily caused by conflict, climate change and economic fluctuations. For the 733 million people who were hungry in 2023, this truth must be hard to accept. The latest states that we have the means to end hunger and malnutrition by 2030 鈥 but we are missing the money and the political will to do so. The world needs increased and more cost-effective financing. But there are already financing solutions that could be rolled out on a larger scale for greater impact, posits .
Around 733 million people faced hunger in 2023, equivalent to one in eleven people globally and one in five in Africa. The is clear: the world is falling significantly short of achieving our goal of Zero Hunger by 2030. Current financing levels are inadequate and often inefficient. We need innovative financing to build resilience in our agrifood systems and ensure equitable access to healthy diets. The report, published jointly by five 缅北禁地agencies, provides updated analyses and recommendations to guide global actions.
As the sun rises over Pemba Island in Tanzania, Shajia and other seaweed farmers head towards the water to harvest their seaweed at low tide. When Shajia first started farming seaweed in 1995, she did it largely along the shore. In the decades since, conditions have changed. 鈥淒ue to the high temperatures caused by climate change, the seaweed was not doing well on the shores,鈥 she explains. 鈥淲e were forced to go deeper into the ocean.鈥 The -supported is helping Shajia adapt to the new normal. As well as receiving equipment, she鈥檚 learned how to grow seaweed along ropes. This ensures a plentiful harvest that is easier to gather and is protected from the tides.
Gita Adikhari realised something significant had changed when her farm in the Jhapa District of eastern Nepal yielded nearly double the amount she would normally harvest. The bumper crop was a result of learnings from a Farmer Field School run by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations () with funding from the Green Climate Fund. An overarching aim of the learnings is to make farming systems more resilient to climate change. Farmer Field Schools are also about boosting the confidence of women farmers, who traditionally have not had a voice in household or community decisions. Gita feels that this has changed and now shares her opinions and gets involved in the community.
Due to the decreasing availability of pasture brought on by worsening drought in the southern Gobi region, camels are producing less milk, causing difficulties for herders who rely on this for income and nutrition. The herder communities in Mongolia, traditionally, do not feed their camels with any supplemental feed and only hand-milk their camels. But now with the knowledge and resources from An EU-funded project, implemented by , camel herders have witnessed the increased production in milk from supplemental feed. Milking equipment has also increased quality in milk production.